Arts Festivals Summit 2019

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Israel Festival, Jerusalem

EFA Festival in Focus | Simon Mundy, in interview with Eyal Sher, General Director of the Israel Festival, Jerusalem looks at the festival’s history and current success

There are few festivals in the world that face such a complicated set of
challenges as the Israel Festival. Even without the aggravations that beset
most, a liberal arts festival in Jerusalem, dedicated to cutting edge and
provocative art in any discipline, is confronted with an historical and
political context which makes its continuing success and daring all the more
remarkable

The first challenge is not the fragility of peace but the uncompromising
and shifting demographics of the city. As well as reflecting the sensitivities
of being sacred to three related but exclusive local religions with global
adherents, Jerusalem now has to deal with the way this has translated into
social deprivation. Eyal Sher, the festival's General Director, says, “Out of a
population of 850.000 we have 190.000 Ultra-Orthodox Jews, many of whom do not
work for religious reasons, and 260.000 Palestinian Arabs for whom the festival
fare is somewhat foreign to the culture.” Of the other 400.000 there has been
an economic and professional shift away from the city.

“Many of Jerusalem's intellectual and
cultural elite have moved since the 1980s, most to the coast and to Tel Aviv
which is more modern and less complicated politically. So Jerusalem has become
very poor, very heavily burdened and so challenging to work in artistically but
exciting too. Its centre is ancient and beautiful – and if there was no
conflict we could just celebrate its diversity – but everything you do in this
city has another dimension.”

The
Israel Festival itself did not originate in Jerusalem. It was founded in 1961
in Caesaria, the coastal town by the sea between Tel Aviv and Haifa that had
been built by King Herod and turned into the provincial Roman capital of Judea
by the Emperor Vespasian but abandoned after the Crusades until it was
refounded in the 1950s. The festival was started to host classical music events
in Caesaria's superb Roman amphitheatre. Given the viciousness with which
Vespasian and his son Titus subjugated the province over more than a decade, it
is perhaps surprising that the newly established republic of Israel should want
to restore the Caesaria 750 years after its dissolution. Less surprising
though, that the festival should have moved to Jerusalem within a few seasons.

The move was made by the then new mayor of Jerusalem, Teddy Kollek, just before Israel took control of the whole city in the Six Days War of 1967. It remained a music festival until the 1980s, when it began to have a more multi-disciplinary character and now it prides itself on the breadth of work in the programme. “In the early years,” says Eyal, “the festival was the only way to see really international fare but, just as everywhere else, the offering has become much bigger and the festival has continually to reinvent itself to keep central and relevant, both locally and to the wider world.”

“It is the trend now that the traditional barriers [between art forms] have gone. We are seeking new stage languages. So we have to ask, who speaks the universal language; who can bring it to the stage?”

The
programme in recent years has focussed far more on providing events that “have
no commercial business model because they are not defined yet. They are just
more up-to-date, daring, thought provoking. We can use our subsidy from the
city to cut through the labels.” Eyal
feels that it is impossible to set out to bring together all the disparate
elements of the Jerusalem audience and that to try to do so by presenting
folkloric aspects of each would not have any artistic integrity. Instead he
sees the job of the three weeks of the festival (1-18 June this year) as to
present outstanding quality and “to become relevant to the cultural consumers,
the students, the intellectuals and academics. Once that is taken care of you
can start building the other audiences. There will always be barriers. Our art
opens itself to a limited target audience so we try to widen it but at the end
it will remain limited. The mainstream doesn't need us.”

Jerusalem
has become a very difficult place for contemporary performance artists to base
themselves, Eyal feels, whether they come from the Jewish or the Arab
communities. “East Jerusalem (the mainly Palestinian half) isn't at the same
place in terms of generating or consuming contemporary secular culture for many
reasons, and on the Jewish side everything is further complicated by the
political situation. Inevitably more of the art that has freedom to experiment
comes from outside. The wall between communities has mostly stopped the
bombings but at a cost.” He says that just as Jewish intellectual life has
migrated to Tel Aviv, so the Palestinian has moved to Ramallah, “so very little
is developing organically here any more.”

Even
if he could bring in artists and audiences from the Arab community they would
have, as he says, “an understandable problem of coming to something called the
Israel Festival. In terms of understanding the work we offer we have to have
education in the process. At the moment there are no habits and no tools. What
we have to do, therefore, is to see our role as an educator and to build a
bridge to the art.”

The festival does that by dividing its
shows between those that are ticketed, and so aimed at its core audience, and
those that are staged in a public place. When a stage is erected in the main
square Eyal says, “what happens is all the good clichés; people from every part
of the community come there and watch, at ease with each other. If you put a
band or any piece of theatre in the street people will stop but it has to be
good. We are not out here to serve ourselves. My goal is to engage people but
to do so by standing behind artistic truth; to continually renew the
environment in which we work. That means that at any moment we have to stand up
to Muslim and Ultra-Orthodox conservatives and on occasion the Minister of
Culture.”

“The festival is going through a really
interesting process at the moment; of taking things to the next step and seeing
how hungry people are for the new.”

Further Information on the Israel Festival, Jerusalem

Founded in 1961, Israel's premiere multi-disciplinary international festival takes place annually in the spring, presenting outstanding international theatre performances, contemporary dance and classical music, along with outstanding original Israeli works and open to the public street performances. The Israel Festival provides an important platform for inter-cultural encounter and dialogue. The festival collaborates with the leading art academies, professional guilds and independent artists for the organisation of master classes and post performances discussions.The 57th edition of the Israel Festival (23 May – 9 June 2018) will continue to build on the Festival's strong brand recognition, uncompromising quality and prestige, while further introducing an innovative and compelling cross-disciplinary artistic program, catering to the festival traditional audience and to new, younger crowds, students and professionals.